Hackery is caring about private parties in the first place. Hackery is also failing to acknowledge that the fundraising goals to hold the integrated private party was met a week before Better Georgia got involved. Hackery is Better Georgia exploiting this situation for their fundraising and publicity and not for the best interests of anyone in Wilcox County. Finally, hackery is failing to report that the “all black prom” in Wilcox County was actually open to anyone who wanted to attend … Asians, Hispanics, Native Americans and yes whites. That is the best – or worst – part. There was no need for the effort to host the third party to begin with. Whites – and everyone else – could have just attended the (very much misnamed) black prom.

The biggest hackery of all is focusing on stuff like this instead of the real issues concerning the black community. I’d like to know A) the illegitimacy rate, B) high school completion rate, C) crime rate of blacks in Wilcox County vs. the whites. I don’t expect Better Georgia to provide such information because it would be harmful to their political and ideological agenda. The Pajamas Media guy COULD HAVE but chose not to, and that was to his credit.

Corporate welfare is booming in Georgia. To be a lobbyist and a politician that can bring home to a single company $100 or $200 million is incredible. Across the board reductions just wouldn’t have such a payday for so few.

Sen. John McCain, Arizona Republican, stopped short of accusing the Obama administration of outright lying about Benghazi, but he said serious questions remain over why senior officials attempted initially to pin the incident to spontaneous protests rather than terrorism.

“The whole line of the presidential campaign to re-elect Barack Obama was bin Laden is dead, al Qaeda is decimated no terrorist attacks anywhere,” Mr. McCain said during an appearance on Fox News as Wednesday’s hearing was winding down. “Then, of course, this thing happened and it had the capability of disrupting that narrative at a really crucial time in a presidential campaign. That explains some of these inexplicable actions” by the administration.

Momentum continued to mount among Republicans for the creation of a select committee to deepen congressional probes into what occurred in Benghazi and how the administration managed the aftermath.